K.J. Somaiya College for Information Technology / Sameep Padora & Associates


© Edmund Sumner

© Edmund Sumner
  • Architects: Sameep Padora & Associates
  • Location: Sion, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
  • Design Team: Subham Pani, Aparna Dhareshwar, Nikita Khatwani, Sandeep Patwa
  • Structural Consultant: Rajeev Shah
  • Area: 2070.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2018
  • Photographs: Edmund Sumner

© Edmund Sumner

© Edmund Sumner

Text description provided by the architects. The IT college building is an addition to the K.J. Somaiya Institute of Engineering on their Sion campus in Northern Mumbai. The site for the new building was flanked on one end by a cement plant, on another by a contaminated rivulet and on the west by the existing 8 storey engineering college building.


© Edmund Sumner

© Edmund Sumner

The client brief was for the new institute to accommodate programs that included Workshops, Laboratories, Lecture Rooms & Student Community Rooms along with an extension to the existing cafeteria in the adjoining building, to be built in a second phase.


© Edmund Sumner

© Edmund Sumner

Plan

Plan

© Edmund Sumner

© Edmund Sumner

Raising the building on a high plinth to protect against flooding in the monsoons, each of the programs are located based on programmatic adjacencies and around two courtyards. A veranda-like circulation space around the courtyard doubles as an activity spine linking all the study rooms and creating opportunities for students to learn through chance meetings and interaction with each other.

The courtyard facing walls of all programs are designed with openings to allow a visual connect with other students in the courtyards, veranda and the classrooms clustered around the court. The students hence even when in their respective spaces feel as if they are in a collective learning environment without walls separating them.


© Edmund Sumner

© Edmund Sumner

The Workshops, Laboratories, Lecture, & Community rooms are designed without any shared walls to create vistas outwards between each program, to reduce any noise transfer from one room to the next, and to allow air circulation around the rooms keeping them cooler.


© Edmund Sumner

© Edmund Sumner

The insulated roof plane spans over all programs linking them together into a distinct singular building while folding into giant water gargoyles that would channel rainwater into the courtyards and further into harvesting tanks.